Tuesday, January 29, 2013

The Week of January 23 in Review Part 6 of 9 - Before Watchmen Minutemen #6 (of 6)

Darwyn Cooke’s six issue mini-series Before Watchmen Minutemen was a great
story. Using Nite Owl’s book about the heroes as the premise for opening up the
history of the Minutemen allowed Cooke to craft an amazing tale. I think the
ending of this series sealed the deal as this being Cooke’s best work since the
New Frontier for DC.

The twist at the end is that Hollis was played by the Comedian
into taking down the Hangman. Hindsight being 20/20 I should have realized that
Cooke would never make it such a simplistic story. If it had played it out with
Nite Owl capturing the child killer and taking Hangman down it would have been
a little too clean and cookie cutter and would not have rang as true to the
source material.

One of the things I remember taking away from Watchmen that
no one was 100% clean. There were good people, but even the good people had
flaws. Not so much as feet of clay but just that regardless of the fantastic
circumstances they were involved in they are still human.

Hollis is the most noble of all the heroes in the world of
Watchmen and even he did not quite understand everything that was going on. The
Comedian at the end of the day forces Hollis to edit his book and take out some
parts and also plays Hollis for a fool by having Hollis take out Hangman. The
Comedian never forgave the Hangman for what he did to him.

It was a great scene when the Comedian confronts Hollis and
lays out the entire story. The vile nature of the Comedian is oozing out of him
as he tells the story. Hollis has to give in to a certain extent but still
leaves in the one part about Blake (The Comedian)’s attack on Sally. At the end
Hollis retires to run his car repair business as acts as a surrogate father to
Laurie (the second Silk Spectre). Hollis is a good guy and is truly heroic and
noble, yet he too has his failings.

Cooke’s stories just have such a ring of truth to them. Not
the circumstances, but the people. At the core of all of his stories is how the
characters act. His people are very real and consistent. In the case of Hollis
you are not going to see him betray people who are his friends and his innate
nobility transcends any failings.

Once the collections come out, if you missed this stuff, I
highly recommend Cooke’s mini-series. Along with New Frontier two of his best
works for DC. Of course his Parker adaptations are also worth getting.